Nuclear Futurism: The Work of Art in The Age of Remainderless Destruction
By Liam Sprod
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About this ebook
Futurism reinvigorates art, literature and philosophy through the unlikely alliance of hauntology and the
Italian futurists. Tracing the paradoxes of the possibilities of total nuclear destruction reveals the terminal
condition of culture in the time of ends, where the logic of the apocalyptic without apocalypse holds sway.
These paradoxes also open the path for a new vision of the future in the form of experimental art and literature.
By re-examining the thought of both Derrida and Heidegger with regards to the history of art, the art of
history and their responses to the most dangerous technology of nuclear weapons the future is exposed
as a progressive event, rather than the atrophied and apocalyptic to-come of the present world. It is
happening now, opening up through the force of art and literature and charting a new path for a futural
philosophy.
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Nuclear Futurism - Liam Sprod
future-no-longer-to-come.
Introduction
Terminal Documents
Kaldren chattered away, explaining the significance of the so-called Terminal Documents. ‘They’re end prints, Powers, final statements, the products of total fragmentation. When I’ve got enough together I’ll build a new world for myself out of them.’
J.G. Ballard ‘The Voices of Time.’
Somewhere in the twentieth century the future failed and the possibility of the new retreated into the insipid instant gratification of the now. This failure has left culture and philosophy in a terminal condition, dominated by a series of discourses of ends: from the end of poetry in the horror of Auschwitz, through the end of television in Timişoara, Romania, the end of art, postmodernism’s end of meta-narratives, to the declaration of the end of history with the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the supposed triumph of liberal democracy, or more precisely, capitalism.¹ The last of these, the victory of capitalism and the end of history, represents the ultimate failure of the future, for it goes beyond the discursive domain of a particular aspect of culture and takes aim at the very progression of development itself. Likewise, it perhaps contains the conditions for the proliferation of particular ends. This reinforces the assertion by Fredric Jameson that it is now easier to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalism
and his reversal, that the result of this leaves only the attempt to imagine capitalism by way of imagining the end of the world.
² Under the stasis of late capitalism, which was achieved long before the final decline of the Soviet Union, where it is impossible to imagine a future history, the apocalyptic discourses of ends multiply as they are infected one after the other with the terminal logic of capitalism.³ This also accounts for the proliferation of apocalyptic imagery from ecological collapse to financial meltdowns and terrorist or state driven Armageddon. However, within this pessimistic production of apocalyptic discourses, there is perhaps the chance to reinvigorate and return to the future and to build a new world out of the fragments of its very failure.
The particular fragments selected for this project are the central end of history and the end of art, these are contrasted with the apocalyptic discourses of remainderless nuclear war and the artistic avant-garde of the Italian futurists, who also aimed to escape history by the very forces of the new that they found in the modern technology which was to shape the century of ends. It is this constellation that gives this book its name and provides the theory of nuclear futurism. Just as it was the impulse of the early twentieth century avant-garde that lead to the declaration of the end of art in the later stages of that same century, so too was it the ideological conflict between communism and capitalism that formed the nuclear tensions and raised the specter of a nuclear apocalypse, as well as the possibility of the declaration of the end of history. Running throughout this fragmentary constellation are the ideas of technology and literature as writing, the latter being the technology of language itself and the possibility of both this book and philosophy.
The new future built from these fragments is undoubtedly a philosophical one, that is, one built through philosophy. As an element of temporality in general, the future cannot help but be subject to the metaphysical examinations of philosophy. In particular, it is the works of German philosopher Martin Heidegger and French philosopher Jacques Derrida that form the base of this new vision of the future. Both of these philosophers are concerned with history, the history of philosophy and the possibilities and impossibilities of temporality and the future opened up by these histories. Derrida specifically engages with the issue of nuclear war and remainderless destruction in a little-read paper from 1984 entitled ‘No Apocalypse, Not Now (Full Speed Ahead, Seven Missiles, Seven Missives).’⁴ This paper aimed to establish a new discourse of nuclear criticism at a time when the apocalyptic tensions of the Cold War were at their highest, and the end of history was waiting just around the corner. For all of its avant-garde intentions this discourse effectively starts and ends with this short paper. However, it can still act as a conduit through which the entirety of Derrida’s philosophical project of deconstruction can be examined, and out of which it is possible to construct a new version of the future as a progressive event, happening now, which is no longer trapped in a beyond, forever sealed off by the fragmentation of time through the discourses of ends.
The reconfiguration of the future as a futural and progressive event instead of an anticipated to come, which always remains in the future and never becomes an actuality, is the central argument of this book. The best articulation of this sort of event is found in Heidegger’s interrelated philosophies of art, technology and language, and this returns to the juxtaposition of futurism and the end of art. Heidegger’s concept of the event is part of his wider critique of the history of philosophy, which was the basis for Derrida’s deconstructive method. By keeping this in mind, it becomes apparent how the development of the possibility of a new future also contains within itself a confrontation with the problem of the history of philosophy as a critical project, opposed to the creativity of art and the path it opens for the future.
This is the path this book aims to follow. Not only as a critique of the static and derelict pessimism of the end times, which allow apocalyptic dangers and horror to persist in the present without the possibility of escape; but as a positive futurity that opens up the present to the future and an escape from the discourses of ends. Never has the possibility of this path been more necessary than in the wasteland of the apocalyptic present. It is this fundamentally philosophical vision of futurity that must rest at the base of any critique of the stasis of the present condition of the world, be that economic, ideological, artistic or poetic. Only through the writing of the future can these critiques function, and only through the sending of that opening up can a new, futural world be built.
The structure of the book follows a path from these problems of the future towards their ends, but perhaps does not need to be read quite so directly. The first Chapter explains the problems of the future in its temporal dimension and the dual issues of the end of history and the end of art. The next two Chapters develop the similarities between futurism and nuclear criticism and the way that each of these discourses confronts the future. Chapters four, five and six examine the wider philosophical work of Jacques Derrida, specifically through deconstruction, the ghost and experimental literature respectively. Aptly enough for a philosopher of writing, reading Derrida is always somewhat like learning to read anew. As each word and every work takes on a new meaning in light of its place and part within the wider scope of the sentence or structure. Thus the reader may find that these three Chapters provide the wider philosophical context for some of the specific ideas that Derrida developed with regard to nuclear criticism and thus they can be read both as an introduction to Derrida’s work in general, but also as a specific comment on the problems raised by nuclear criticism and the temporality of the future. Chapters seven and nine examine the work of Martin Heidegger, through his theories of art and language respectively, and develop his idea of the event as an alternative temporality that escapes the problems of futurity. These are joined by an excursion into the theory of the museum in Chapter eight, which returns to the issues of the archive and its relation to nuclear criticism and the futurists. Chapters ten and eleven bring art and history face to face with the apocalyptic nature of their own ends and elaborates the reconfigured image of the future by which nuclear futurism aims to escape this apocalyptic stasis.
Chapter 1
The (Non) Event of 1984
1984 is an ominous year. It is the symbol of the future. This, of course, is in reference to George Orwell’s book 1984; the future dystopia which has still not occurred. Although the calendar tells us that we have long since passed the date, in many ways 1984 still remains in the future. All futures, it seems, must fall prey to this flaw, be they utopian or dyspotian. The future can never be now. It is always future futurity, forever to-come and never present. A certain way of thinking about the future is revealed here, the future anterior, where a future event is talked about as if it has happened already and can now be observed from a time after its happening: ‘the future will have been like’. However, this is only one mode of thinking about the future, a mode that may have ended in 1984. In fact, it is possible to say that the beginning of the future will have been in 1984. This event of the future has in many ways been forgotten, or worse still is destined merely to be remembered, to become part of history.
In 1984 a small colloquium took place at Cornell University on a newly created type of criticism called Nuclear Criticism. This period of time was possibly the hottest the Cold War ever became aside from the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. Just a year before President Regan had denounced the USSR as the Evil Empire
and instigated the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) or ‘Star Wars’, a plan to create a defense shield over America to protect it from potential nuclear attack.¹ Subsequently, this plan was reinvigorated by George W. Bush and is still being implemented across Europe, much to the disgust of Russia. Only three years later in 1987 the nuclear stockpile of the USSR reached its maximum at 40 723 weapons, while the USA had 23 490.² Amidst this climate the Cornell colloquium sought to examine how these conscious and unconscious nuclear fears played into various texts, and what might be the critical response to these texts.³ At the spearhead of this new discourse was Jacques Derrida who presented a paper entitled ‘No Apocalypse, Not Now (Full Speed Ahead, Seven Missiles, Seven Missives)’, which in many ways may be regarded as the founding manifesto of nuclear criticism. As the term ‘founding manifesto’ implies, the colloquium and the subsequent discourse of nuclear criticism saw itself as an important new mode of discourse which would change the nature of criticism itself, bringing forth a new age of critique.
However, only a handful of years later the Cold War was to come to a sudden end with the collapse of the USSR; an event which Francis Fukuyama was to describe as the end of history. Certainly, to the extent that it depends on the threat of imminent nuclear destruction, it seems that the end of the Cold War was indeed the end of nuclear criticism. More importantly, what also seemed to end was the very utopian impulse at the core of nuclear criticism. For Fukuyama, what the end of history represented was the end of change, the end of new modes of thought, of ideology. The production of ideology, and the violence associated with these differing ideologies found its apotheosis in that which was the very subject of nuclear criticism. Fukuyama writes:
The twentieth century saw the developed world descend into a paroxysm of ideological violence, as liberalism contended first with the remnants of absolutism, then bolshevism and fascism, and finally an updated Marxism that threatened to lead to the ultimate apocalypse of nuclear war.⁴
Of course there is much more to the idea of the end of history than the avoidance of nuclear war. But what this shows is that with the collapse of the Soviet Union came an apparent end of the nuclear issue. The conditions that seemed to define the domain of nuclear criticism also collapsed. The future of nuclear criticism, in both senses of the word, was abandoned to the history of ideas. Many would say that the disappearance of the small movement of nuclear criticism is a fair enough price to pay for the end of the threat of imminent nuclear war. However, for Fukuyama, there is much more at stake in the end of history. He concludes: In the post-historical period there will be neither art nor philosophy, just the perpetual caretaking of the museum of human history.
⁵ The end of nuclear criticism is merely indicative of the wider ends of philosophy and art, which are much more troubling thoughts.
Along with the end of history, the end of art has been mentioned many times before Fukuyama took up the idea. Notably, Arthur C. Danto